... notwithstanding all this, by virtue of his feeling for beauty and of his perception of the vital connexion of beauty with truth, Keats accomplished so much in poetry, that in one of the two great modes by which poetry interprets, in the faculty of... Englische Studien - Pàgina 891918Visualització completa - Sobre aquest llibre
| Thomas Humphry Ward - 1880 - 648 pàgines
...of his feeling for beauty and of his perception of the vital connexion of beauty with truth, Keats accomplished so much in poetry, that in one of the...we call natural magic, he ranks with Shakespeare. 'The tongue of Kean,' he says in an admirable criticism of that great actor and of his enchanting elocution,... | |
| Thomas Humphry Ward - 1880 - 650 pàgines
...of his feeling for beauty and of his perception of the vital connexion of beauty with truth, Keats accomplished so much in poetry, that in one of the...we call natural magic, he ranks with Shakespeare. 'The tongue of Kean,' he says in an admirable criticism of that great actor and of his enchanting elocution,... | |
| Matthew Arnold - 1881 - 654 pàgines
...of the vital connexion of 1 t beauty with truth, Keats accomplished so much in poetry, that in '.U one of the two great modes by which poetry interprets, in the faculty yf of naturalistic interpretation, in what we- call natural magic, he ti ranks with Shakespeare. 'The... | |
| Brainerd Kellogg - 1882 - 492 pàgines
...of his feeling for beauty and of his perception of the vital connection of beauty with truth, Keats accomplished so much in poetry that in one of the...interprets, in the faculty of naturalistic interpretation, he ranks with Shakespeare. No one else in English poetry, save Shakespeare, has in expression quite... | |
| Brainerd Kellogg - 1882 - 460 pàgines
...feeling for beauty and of his perception of the vital connection of beauty with truth, Keats accomphshed so much in poetry that in one of the two great modes...interprets, in the faculty of naturalistic interpretation, he ranks with Shakespeare. No one else in English poetry, save Shakespeare, has in expression quite... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1882 - 634 pàgines
...In the conclusion of his essay, Mr. Arnold repeats the verdict he has given elsewhere, that ' In ono of the two great modes by which poetry interprets,...naturalistic interpretation, in what we call natural magic, Keats ranks with Shakspeare. The work which he Las left is Shaksperean work ; not imitative indeed... | |
| Thomas Humphry Ward - 1883 - 686 pàgines
...of his feeling for beauty and of his perception of the vital connexion of beauty with truth, Keats accomplished so much in poetry, that in one of the...we call natural magic, he ranks with Shakespeare. 'The tongue of Kean,' he says in an admirable criticism of that great actor and of his enchanting elocution,... | |
| Thomas Humphry Ward - 1883 - 734 pàgines
...of his feeling for beauty and of his perception of the vital connexion of beauty with truth, Keats accomplished so much in poetry, that in one of the...we call natural magic, he ranks with Shakespeare. 'The tongue of Kean,' he says in an admirable criticism of that great actor and of his enchanting elocution,... | |
| Brainerd Kellogg - 1883 - 492 pàgines
...connection of beauty willi truth, Keats accomplished so much 408 Literature of Period VIII., 1780 •. in poetry that in one of the two great modes by which...interprets, in the faculty of naturalistic interpretation, he ranks with Shakespeare. No one else in English poetry, save Shakespeare, has in expression quite... | |
| Thomas Humphry Ward - 1884 - 654 pàgines
...of his feeling for beauty and of his perception of the vital connexion of beauty with truth, Keats accomplished so much in poetry, that in one of the...we call natural magic, he ranks with Shakespeare. 'The tongue of Kean,' he says in an admirable criticism of that great actor and of his enchanting elocution,... | |
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